Tension heightens at JU as protesters refuse to leave campus

News Desk 6 November 2019, Wed Published: 08:59

Defying authorities’ directives to leave the campus following the shutdown of Jahangirnagar University (JU) for an indefinite period, teachers and students continued their demonstrations on Tuesday, demanding the removal of its VC Prof Dr Farzana Islam on corruption charges.

The demonstrating students also vowed not to vacate their dormitories.

Under the banner of ‘Jahangirnagar against Corruption’, the teachers and students held a solidarity rally on the campus in the morning and tried to lay a siege to the residence of the vice-chancellor in the morning.

Obstructed by police, the demonstrators took position on the road leading to the residence.

After the university was shut and the resident students were asked to vacate their dormitories, huge police were deployed on the campus, including in front of the VC’s residence.

In the morning, the agitating teachers and students held a solidarity rally in front of the Academic Building to press home their demand for the removal of the VC.

Speakers at the rally said Prof Farzana has lost her moral right to remain as the VC and even as a teacher when she provoked Bangladesh Chhatra League men to attack the protesters.

From the rally, Associate Professor Rayhan Rhyne, spokesperson of the movement, announced that they would lay a siege to the VC’s residence again in the afternoon.

University’s former Proctor Tapan Kumar Saha said, “It’s unfortunate for the teachers and students of the university that the VC termed the assault on them as mass uprising. Prof Farzana Islam not only should face investigation for corruption but also should be brought under justice.”

As per their announcement from the rally, the teachers and students started for the VC’s residence in the afternoon to lay a siege to it.

However, police obstructed them at the mouth of the road leading to the residence around 5:15pm. They later took position on the road and continued their demonstrations there.

Defying the directives of university authorities to vacate the halls, the students of different residential halls stayed back on the campus, saying that they will not leave the campus, no matter what.

In the morning, the JU authorities asked the resident students to vacate their dormitories by 3:30pm on Wednesday, warning that noncompliance of the directive will invite action.

The protests were launched in August, demanding a judicial inquiry into the reported involvement of the vice-chancellor in corruption and mismanagement of the Tk 1,445 crore campus development projects.

It was alleged that the VC managed the leaders of the JU unit BCL with Tk 1.6 crore from the development fund. – UNB